NATO pledges new funding for Ukrainian military

NATO has endorsed new funding for Ukraine's defense in the form of “trust funds” to help with logistics and cyber defense, as well as command and control, according to NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen.

The funding is aimed at
strengthening the Ukrainian military, though no specific amounts
have been allocated yet.

The announcement came after NATO foreign ministers met with their
Ukrainian counterpart, Pavlo Klimkin, in Brussels on Wednesday.

Rasmussen also spoke in support of Ukrainian president’s peace
plan, calling it “a major step forward.”

During the meeting, the ministers talked about strengthening
NATO’s capacity to assist its partners in need of better defense
and security.

“We agreed that the Alliance will provide such support more
systematically and more swiftly. We will work on ways to create a
pool of military and civilian experts who are ready to deploy
when needed and to strengthen coordination with other
international actors,” Rasmussen said.

Georgia was also discussed at the meeting, with ministers
agreeing on a package that will help align the country
“closer to NATO.”

In the wake of the Ukrainian crisis, NATO has been using the
‘Russian threat’ to justify the build-up of troops in Central and
Eastern Europe.

At the end of April, US Secretary of State John Kerry called on NATO to return to its original goal of
fending off Russia, seizing the chance presented by the Ukrainian
crisis to sever Europe from Moscow and move it closer to America.

Russia’s ambassador to the UN, Vitaly Churkin, warned in early June that if NATO is using the
situation in Ukraine to "beef up its own muscles," it is
a “detrimental” policy.